Its really cool seeing KDE make so much progress, and mature into such a big, robust umbrella organization that helps so many smaller open source projects. They're a real jewel of the Open Souce ecosystem.
Germany gets a lot of shit for things they do poorly, but should be proud of both KDE, and the Sovereign Tech Fund.
I also think it's worth reflecting on just how much stuff KDE gets done with so little money. I dropped them 50€ yesterday, and would encourage people to do the same: https://kde.org/community/donations/previousdonations/
Funding is nice, though ... why so much into KDE? Not other projects?
I think KDE was better in the past. With its "wayland-only" future it will leave behind several linux users.
> I also think it's worth reflecting on just how much stuff KDE gets done with so little money. I dropped them 50€ yesterday, and would encourage people to do the same
So the donation daemon worked. Though, if they now have so much money, why would you recommend more money to KDE and not other projects? Why not xserver https://github.com/X11Libre/xserver or gtk2-ng https://git.devuan.org/Daemonratte/gtk2-ng? Granted, these have fewer users, but there should be more diversity among those receiving funding.
I also donate a small part of my monthly income, but I don't feel a need to say where to or nudge others to do the same. It would not make any difference to me personally if Joe donates to abc or xyz.
> With its "wayland-only" future it will leave behind several linux users.
This is so sad. Something like this already happened two decades ago - when GNOME 3 arrived, and KDE 4 - rough times, things broke and I had to do some distro (and DE) hopping - before settling again. Whenever you start to see a project mature and stable enough in Linux land, maybe even starts to gain unexpected traction, soon somebody decides it's time to "move fast and break things".
I sincerely hope KDE reconsiders X11 support; IIRC they proposed to keep it if the community showed still enough interest. Of course maintaining a dual stack requires double the effort, but if funding comes in, come on, maybe there's enough resources to keep X11 support alive - if feature freezed - a couple years more. There's still a few rough edges around Wayland that prevent me and others to switch.
So, it's nice to see governments realizing the software is a public good and likely needs to be treated as such, including, inevitably, as a utility. Open source is a seemingly ideal foundation for a democracy to adopt. Commercial, private code, then is the other side of the fence and needs to be tightly controlled and regulated the same way Russia, China, North Korea, etc are seen in political spheres.
Its really cool seeing KDE make so much progress, and mature into such a big, robust umbrella organization that helps so many smaller open source projects. They're a real jewel of the Open Souce ecosystem.
Germany gets a lot of shit for things they do poorly, but should be proud of both KDE, and the Sovereign Tech Fund.
I also think it's worth reflecting on just how much stuff KDE gets done with so little money. I dropped them 50€ yesterday, and would encourage people to do the same: https://kde.org/community/donations/previousdonations/
Funding is nice, though ... why so much into KDE? Not other projects?
I think KDE was better in the past. With its "wayland-only" future it will leave behind several linux users.
> I also think it's worth reflecting on just how much stuff KDE gets done with so little money. I dropped them 50€ yesterday, and would encourage people to do the same
So the donation daemon worked. Though, if they now have so much money, why would you recommend more money to KDE and not other projects? Why not xserver https://github.com/X11Libre/xserver or gtk2-ng https://git.devuan.org/Daemonratte/gtk2-ng? Granted, these have fewer users, but there should be more diversity among those receiving funding.
I also donate a small part of my monthly income, but I don't feel a need to say where to or nudge others to do the same. It would not make any difference to me personally if Joe donates to abc or xyz.
> With its "wayland-only" future it will leave behind several linux users.
This is so sad. Something like this already happened two decades ago - when GNOME 3 arrived, and KDE 4 - rough times, things broke and I had to do some distro (and DE) hopping - before settling again. Whenever you start to see a project mature and stable enough in Linux land, maybe even starts to gain unexpected traction, soon somebody decides it's time to "move fast and break things".
I sincerely hope KDE reconsiders X11 support; IIRC they proposed to keep it if the community showed still enough interest. Of course maintaining a dual stack requires double the effort, but if funding comes in, come on, maybe there's enough resources to keep X11 support alive - if feature freezed - a couple years more. There's still a few rough edges around Wayland that prevent me and others to switch.
> The names Sécurix and Bureautix are nods to the famous indomitable Gauls Astérix and Obélix
Incoming retcon of Unix…
Will Nate finally abandon his donate-now daemon or not?
So, it's nice to see governments realizing the software is a public good and likely needs to be treated as such, including, inevitably, as a utility. Open source is a seemingly ideal foundation for a democracy to adopt. Commercial, private code, then is the other side of the fence and needs to be tightly controlled and regulated the same way Russia, China, North Korea, etc are seen in political spheres.
Now this is interesting, because moving away from foreign cloud vendors hardly helps if everything else stays the same.
Maybe some Jolla sponsoring as well?
Let's fucking gooo!
KDE has been the most used DE in the Arch space since 2019 and kept growing, totally deserved BTW.
https://pkgstats.archlinux.de/fun/Desktop%20Environments/his...
So they have money to throw away? because there is no path to profit....
KDE is a common good. This is like saying there's no path to profit for building roads or sewers. It's an enabler of profit and development.
Digital infra...